Syrian Electronic Army Suspected In Web Attack On New York Times, Twitter, And Huffington Post

How the New York Times web site looked during the hack.
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The Syrian Electronic Army (SEA), a Pro-Assad regime hacker group, claims it gained control over a handful of web domains of major media sites including Twitter, The New York Times, and Huffington Post U.K.

The group said in a tweet that it took over the Twitter.com domain. The SEA said it was able to change some of the basic information in Twitter's domain registry, such as the admin name and the email address for contacts, at DomainTools.com, here. However, it looks like that information has been switched back to normal.

A Twitter spokesperson directed Business Insider to the company's status page, which states that the site's domain records were modified.

Twitter says the attack affected the service it uses to host images on its site and some of those images were briefly affected. Twitter hasn't expanded on the cause of the attack, but says no user information was compromised.

The New York Times website was taken down today too. The newspaper said the site went down after an attack on the company's domain name registrar, Melbourne IT. Employees were told to stop sending sensitive emails during the attack, The Times' Christine Haughney wrote.

Marc Frons, chief information officer for The New York Times, issued a statement this afternoon warning employees that the external attack was by "the Syrian Electronic Army or someone trying very hard to be them."